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Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James (23) drives past Atlanta Hawks’ Thabo Sefolosha (25), from Switzerland, in the second half of an NBA basketball game on Monday, in Cleveland. The Cavaliers won 109-94. Image Credit: AP

Cleveland: LeBron James’ critics will only set him free if he can deliver an NBA championship for the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Oddsmakers say that James and the Cavaliers will roll through the Eastern Conference with little opposition.

If that happens James will reach the NBA Finals for a sixth consecutive season (including four with the Miami Heat), a feat that hasn’t been accomplished by an NBA player since Bill Russell’s Boston Celtics dynasty of the 1960s.

But for James the ultimate prize is obviously a title for the championship-starved city of Cleveland, looking for its first professional title since the Browns’ NFL championship in 1964.

James won two titles in Miami, and many believe that adding another in Cleveland would cement his legacy as one of the game’s all-time greats.

“There’s always going to be pressure for him because the expectations are so high,” said former Clippers and Chicago Bulls coach Vinny Del Negro. “When he’s on your team, you’re supposed to win the championship. That’s just the way it works with star players, with superstar players. LeBron went back to Cleveland to bring them a championship, and that adds to the pressure.”

Toronto had the second-best record in the East and has an All-Star backcourt in Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan. But the Raptors lost in the first round of the playoffs the previous two seasons and the franchise hasn’t advanced to the second round since 2001.

Meanwhile, the Nos. 3-6 seeds, Atlanta, Miami, Boston and Charlotte have roughly the same level of talent going into the playoffs.

But none are on par with the Cavaliers, who had the best record (57-25) in the East.

“It’s Cleveland and everybody else,” TNT studio analyst Charles Barkley said. “All those other teams, they could beat each other. But I don’t see anybody beating the Cavaliers and LeBron James.”

That’s the kind of pressure James faces when the playoffs start.

James actually has been in the Finals six times — four with Miami (2011-14) and twice with Cleveland (2007 and 2015) — and he’s 2-4 when playing for the championship ring.

The Cavaliers lost forward Kevin Love (left shoulder injury) in the first round of last year’s playoffs, and point guard Kyrie Irving (left knee) was sidelined in Game 1 of the Finals, which the Cavaliers lost in six games to the Golden State Warriors.

But the Cavaliers, who start their championship quest Sunday against the Detroit Pistons, are healthy going into the playoffs this year.

Cleveland had its share of drama during the season. David Blatt was fired as coach and replaced by Tyronn Lue in January.

In the Western Conference, until Golden State is knocked from its throne, the Warriors will be favoured to wear the crown again.

The Warriors finished with a regular-season record of 73-9, topping the all-time-best mark of 72-10 set by Michael Jordan and the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls.

Reigning most valuable player Stephen Curry has become the darling of the league with his wizardly shooting and playmaking acumen. Forward Draymond Green is the man with the passion and fire that drives the Warriors. And Coach Steve Kerr is the steward of a group that has changed the game.

The Warriors have been so dominant that many wonder how San Antonio, even with a remarkable 67-15 record, can unseat the 2015 champions.

The Spurs had a historic season too, matching the 1985-86 Boston Celtics for the best-ever home record at 40-1.

But the Spurs’ lone loss came to the Warriors, who had lost 33 consecutive regular-season games in San Antonio before Golden State gutted out a victory in Texas on April 10 to win the season series, 3-1.

That win by the Warriors may have changed the dynamics if the teams meet in the West finals.

— Los Angeles Times